An Interview with DJ MAZI
by Joe Hensen
photos courtesty of TCA
So I read that you were
born in Iran, what originally brought you to the states?
I moved to the U.S. when I was 12 with
my family. We came here because of political turmoil in
Iran.
What got you into spinning
records?
Ever since the age of 16 I was going dancing
at a club here in Chicago called Medusa's. Essentially what
got me into spinning was my love for dancing. In 1990, my
freshmen year in college, I got a chance to mess around
with some turntables and a mixer. We were at my girlfriend's
house around Christmas time. Her brother had pulled out
his old DJ gear and by the time we left their house I ended
up commandeering the entire set up. Getting behind the decks
was more or less an accident. If my ex's brother hadn't
pulled out those decks on that day who knows what I'd be
doing now.
Can you play any instruments?
I play the guitar and my keyboards badly.
Whats the difference between
the crowds of all the different places you've played like
Chicago, Paris, Ibiza, Tokyo and so on?
It would take a book to answer that question.
Their differences are overshadowed for me by their similarities.
Before the set and afterwards everyone can potentially be
very different. But while I'm playing music people basically
fall into two catagories. Those who get the music and those
who don't. I find that those two catagories can exist anywhere.
How do you feel about
all the animosity from those who spin on cds and those on
vinyl?
Thankfully, I don't hear much of it anymore
and it's a stupid debate. Music should be the topic of discussion,
not whether it's playing from a CD, a record or futuristic
nano cube.
What dj's do you like
to hear?
DJ's who put the music above their own
ego. The last few sets I enjoyed we're played by Loco Dice,
Josh Wink, David Duriez and my roomate Kyle Szmurlo.
What inspired you to produce
your own tracks?
"Move Any Mountain" by The Shamen.
I remember they had a remix contest for that song making
all the parts available on one of the vinyl pressings. Right
around that time I was working on accompanying a producer
friend of mine with some beats and effects while performing
live. We decided to take a crack at the contest. During
the process I started to wrap my head around drum machines
and sequencing. Our remix sucked but it got me fired up
to learn more.
Do you have any favorites?
Favorite...
Writer: Louise Ferdinand Celine
Food: Thai
Band: Joy Division
Ice cream: Coffee or Spumoni
Synthesizer: ARP Odyssey MK3
Music software: Cubase SX
Club: Two way tie between Fabric and Crystal (in Istanbul)
Actor: Harvey Keitel
Moon: Callisto (Jupiter's 2nd largest)
I could go on but that's enough.
I've read that your sets
have a "journey style" way to them. What is that,
exactly?
I like to go between genres, styles and
tempos to create a dynamic set of music that reflects the
communication between the audience and me. The most important
thing for me about DJ'ing is this impromptu creation of
atmosphere that is unique each time. I like to build up
a crowd but I think just getting harder and harder is plain
boring. Too many DJ's treat their audience like halfwits.
When I'm on the floor dancing I like a DJ that can play
with my emotions and I try to do the same when behind the
decks.
Do you have anything special
planned for your show here in Kansas City?
Well right now I've just started working
on my next Audio Soul Project album due to be released in
April of next year. I have a couple of the tracks near completion
and KC will be the first place where I'll be testing them
out.
Do you have any advice
for any beginning dj's out there?
Don't start your own label. It's pretty
much the mold to start as a DJ and then 3 months later become
a producer and then 2 months later after everyone has turned
down your demo start your own digital label on Beatport.
This lack of quality control is choking our scene. I think
it's temporary though. The people who truely invest in their
music, time being the most precious thing they can give,
will succeed and those looking for short cuts will eventually
get bored and becoming accountants like they were always
meant to be. I guess my advice is to do it for the music
and the music alone. For even more on Mazi, check out visit
TCA-Web.com,
GourmetRecordings.com
or Mazi
on MySpace!